Ananas Noire
Variety
Approved Data
created by Laura T. at 01.02.2023
Taste
juicy
fruity
sweet
aromatic
Location
Greenhouse
Outdoor
Color
green
red
brown
Propagating
Planting
Harvest
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Also called "black pineapple" or "black pineapple". Large green-red-brown marbled fruity beef tomato, high-yielding, very tasty. Its flat-round fruits grow up to 12 cm in size and weigh up to 200 g. The skin is thin (rain protection) with a matt surface. The taste is described as extremely aromatic, sweet and fruity. The taste is best just before it is fully ripe. Ananas Noir is kept as a pole tomato and can grow up to 2m high. It needs a lot of warmth and is very productive under good conditions but cannot be stored for long.
Non hybrid
Not frost resistant
Pre-culture from March indoors at approx. +20-25°C, germination period 8-14 days. Harden off the seedlings in May and plant out in a greenhouse, tomato house or outdoors (with rain protection). Tie to supports or ties and pinch out regularly. Loves plenty of sun and - as tomatoes are heavy feeders - regular feeding. Plant 50-100 cm apart. Can grow with 1-3 stems, with one stem the fruits will be larger.
Light requirement
Sunny
Water requirement
Very humid
Soil
Light (sandy)
Nutrient requirement
High
Seeding distance
60 cm
Row spacing
70 cm
Seeding depth
0.5 cm
Asparagus
Basil
Bean (Broad bean / Faba bean / Field bean)
Bean (Dwarf bean)
Bean (Runner bean)
Broccoli
Brussels sprouts
Cabbage (Cabbage)
Cabbage (Savoy cabbage)
Carrots
Cauliflower
Celery (Celeriac / Celery root)
Celery (Celery)
Chili
Chives
Collard greens (Kale)
Collard greens (Tuscan kale / Dinosaur kale / Palm tree kale)
Common marigold
Corn / Maize
Cress
Garlic
Kohlrabi / German turnip / Turnip cabbage
Lettuce (Lettuce)
Lettuce (Radicchio / Italian chicory)
Mint
Mizuna / Japanese mustard greens
Napa cabbage / Chinese cabbage
Nasturtium
Onion
Onion (Spring onion)
Oregano
Pak Choi
Parsley
Pepper / Paprika
Radish
Radishes
Root parsley
Soybean
Spinach (Summer)
Grey mold
Early blight of potato
Thrips
Aphids
Spider mites
White fly